Wardipedia

INVOLVEMENT

Involvement – and information, inclusion, influence, independence

The 5 ins. All crucial ingredients in inpatients having a therapeutic, empowering, admission which equips them well for maintaining their stability when they’re back home. (OK. We’ve stopped doing the in- thing now.) The fact that the government are very keen on patient autonomy isn’t a strong enough reason to avoid this!

Staff have developed imaginative and effective ways of enabling patients to have as much say as possible about how they spend their time, what treatments they receive and how services evolve. This isn’t easy! It’s particularly complex when patients have severe cognitive impairment, whether temporarily (eg through psychosis) or degeneratively (eg because of dementia). Staff find creative ways of establishing people’s preferences, often with the help of friends and relatives, and of supporting individuals to be as independent and influential as their health and the constraints of ward life allow.

We hope that the primary organ in mental illness starts to be openly and accessibly discussed in mental healthcare. Understanding how our brains are affected by mental illness is pretty essential to being able to come to terms with the havoc that the illness creates and to learning to manage it as effectively as possible.